What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“The above goods are now offered … as low as goods of the same quality have been sold … for two years past.”
As spring arrived in 1776, Peter Stretch advertised an assortment of textiles and accessories available at his store on Walnut Street in Philadelphia. In a notice in the March 27 edition of the Pennsylvania Journal, he listed many kinds of fabrics, including “SCARLET, brown, drab and mixed superfine broadcloaths and trimmings,” “spotted velvets and thicksetts,” and “best black Paduasoy and white sattin.” Among the accessories, he stocked “death-head and basket buttons,” “knee garters,” and “buttons worked with pearl and spangle, on the most fashionable colours.” Stretch’s inventory also included “claret, brown, drab, blue, scarlet, and mixed superfine Bath coatings, as fine as were ever imported into this place.” He conveniently did not mention when he had received shipment of any of his wares, sidestepping whether they arrived before the Continental Association went into effect on December 1, 1774, though he had on another occasion detailed his compliance with that pact.
In this instance, Stretch did assert that his goods “are now offered to the public as low as goods of the same quality have been sold for in this place for two years past.” In that regard, he did acknowledge the nonimportation agreement devised by the Second Continental Congress in response to the Coercive Acts that Parliament passed to punish Boston for destroying tea by throwing it into the harbor in December 1773. The ninth article required that “Venders of Goods or Merchandise will not take Advantage of the Scarcity of Goods that may be occasioned by this Associacion, but will sell the same at the Rates we have been respectively accustomed to do for twelve Months past.” It also specified that merchants and shopkeepers who did engage in price gouging then “no Person ought, nor will any of us deal with any such Person … at any Time thereafter, for any Commodity whatever.” Stretch certainly wanted to avoid such consequences! In stating that his prices matched those charged two years earlier, he assured prospective customers that they were in line with prices from before the Continental Association went into effect. He did not promise great bargains, but at least his customers did not have to worry that he took advantage of the disruptions to trade caused by the imperial crisis and a war that started the previous April.






















